Bernard v. Internal Revenue Service (In Re Bernard)

130 B.R. 740, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 1143, 68 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5514, 1991 WL 165482
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedJuly 15, 1991
Docket19-80175
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 130 B.R. 740 (Bernard v. Internal Revenue Service (In Re Bernard)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bernard v. Internal Revenue Service (In Re Bernard), 130 B.R. 740, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 1143, 68 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5514, 1991 WL 165482 (La. 1991).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

W. DONALD BOE, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

Introduction and Summary

This is an action brought by debtor Jory Bernard challenging assessment against him of approximately $180,000 in penalty tax provided by 26 U.S.C. Secs. 6671-6672. He does not dispute the nondischargeability in bankruptcy of the taxes remaining unpaid if he is in fact liable for them. 1 Amounts paid by him after assessment total $50,837.11. The penalty tax is designed to protect against loss of trust fund income and social security taxes withheld from employee wages. The penalty tax amounts to 100 per cent of the tax loss suffered by the public treasury. Persons are liable for the penalty tax if they are “responsible persons” who willfully fail to collect, or truthfully account for, or pay over such amounts to the Government. Jory has the burden of proof on the responsible person issue. Once found to be a responsible person, Jory also has the burden of proof on the willfulness issues.

Frequently, more than one responsible person is liable for the penalty tax. While liability of each such person is joint and several, the Government can only recoup 100 per cent of its loss. In the present case, the Internal Revenue Service assessed penalty taxes against Jory plus two other officials in a now defunct oilfield service company that used federal withholding taxes as a source of payment for other creditors. Jory Bernard and his father, Joel, were assessed for the quarters ending March 31, 1982; June 30, 1982; December 31,1982; and March 31,1983 (here *742 inafter “the tax quarters in controversy”). Exhibit D-7, IRS Certificate of Assessments and Payments. An accountant, Daniel Theriot, was assessed about $144,000.00 for the first two of these quarters. Contrary to the thrust of his testimony at trial, Joel Bernard in 1983 reported that Jory was one of the individuals who authorized or allowed other obligations to be paid during the period that tax liabilities were being accrued. Exhibit D-8, page 2, line 26.

The parties entered into the following pretrial stipulation:

“Prior to the Comptroller of the Company, Mr. Dan Theriot, leaving the employ of the company in July 1982, Mr. Theriot, along with consultation of the President of the company, Mr. Joel Bernard [Jory’s father], made all decisions on which debts were to be paid and directing disbursements of the company.”

If read literally, this stipulation means that Jory cannot willfully have taken action pri- or to July 1982 which resulted in nonpayment of tax withholdings. This stipulation does not exclude the possibility that Jory later engaged in a willful failure to pay withholding taxes that accrued either prior to or after July 1982.

The parties have further stipulated that after Theriot’s dismissal in July 1982, Joel Bernard directed that no payments to creditors were to be made without his direct approval. Joel did so after being contacted in July 1982 by an IRS revenue officer who also met with employees Nancy Connick and Susan Landry Livingston about unpaid payroll taxes. The IRS officer did not meet with Jory at that time, and Jory contends that he was unaware of the tax ar-rearage. Neither the stipulations nor the evidence take Jory off the hook.

After consideration of the entire record, the court concludes the assertion that Jory was unaware of the tax arrearage cannot be believed. Jory was too close to his father not to know that there were unpaid trust fund taxes. He also was too involved in too many aspects of the company’s business not to know that there were unpaid trust fund taxes. The contention that Jory knew only generally that there was a tax problem — but not a withholding tax problem — further disregards Jory’s heavy financial interest in the family business which was his livelihood. Finally, the record rather clearly indicates that Jory was affirmatively apprised of arrearages in trust fund taxes in July 1982. Even if before July 1982 Jory had no control over company disbursements and no knowledge of withholding tax arrearages, the record appears to show that he did afterward, and Jory has not proved otherwise by a preponderance of the evidence. Jory’s checkwrit-ing authority placed him a position to pay all back payroll taxes, even those that accrued prior to July 1982, because company revenues were far in excess of what would have been required to pay those taxes. The contention that Jory was disabled from using his checkwriting authority to pay the back withholding taxes by his father’s direction that no payments (to anyone) were to be made without his approval is insufficient as a matter of law to exonerate Jory from liability. The law is clear that “following orders” is no defense since a responsible person’s first duty is to make the public treasury whole for trust fund taxes, even if this means disregarding the orders of a superior. There is also considerable room for doubt whether the direction Jory’s father gave to company personnel that no payments were to be made without his approval was intended to be binding on Jory — partially because his father did not communicate that instruction to Jory. The court concludes that Jory Bernard is liable for all tax quarters in controversy, though the Government cannot collect more than 100 per cent of its loss from all, collectively, who are liable for it. Jory’s liability is nondischargeable in bankruptcy.

Findings of Fact

Jory Bernard contends that he was not a responsible person and also that he did not willfully fail to pay to the Government taxes due to it from Coppertop Supply Company, a closely held family business. IRS disputes both of these contentions.

Coppertop Supply Company was incorporated in the 1970’s. It was an oilfield *743 equipment supply business which purchased both new equipment and used equipment which was refurbished for its customers. With the downturn in Louisiana’s oil economy, Coppertop filed a corporate Chapter 11 petition in April 1983. Its case was converted to Chapter 7 in 1984. Plaintiffs father, Joel Bernard, was one of the founders of Coppertop. Joel has been assessed by IRS for each of the four quarters involved in this controversy. Joel had ultimate control over conduct of the business, which had about 100 employees. He was President, could write checks on the business without a co-signator, and was also a shareholder. 2 However, the court finds control that Joel exercised over the corporation during all of the tax quarters in controversy was loose. Pew corporate formalities were observed. No corporate by-laws formally established who had what authority, and there were apparently no formal meetings of directors or shareholders. Joel was frequently absent from the business for weeks at a time, either on company travel or on vacation. He did maintain frequent contact with his personal secretary by phone, but mainly concerning personal matters. Joel was not a “hands-on” manager.

Joel had additional business interests. When questioned about these at trial, he testified that he owned Kildare Tool and Supply Company, which rented equipment to the construction trades. He also testified he had an interest in Sea Crew Catering Company which provided catering services for offshore oil operations.

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Bluebook (online)
130 B.R. 740, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 1143, 68 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5514, 1991 WL 165482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bernard-v-internal-revenue-service-in-re-bernard-lawb-1991.